Back to Search Start Over

Market impact shapes competitive advantage of investment strategies in financial markets

Authors :
Wen-Juan Xu
Li-Xin Zhong
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 17, Iss 2, p e0260373 (2022), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2022.

Abstract

The formation of an efficient market depends on the competition between different investment strategies, which accelerates all available information into asset prices. By incorporating market impact and two kinds of investment strategies into an agent-based model, we have investigated the coevolutionary mechanism of different investment strategies and the role of market impact in shaping a competitive advantage in financial markets. The coevolution of history-dependent strategies and reference point strategies depends on the levels of market impact and risk tolerance. For low market impact and low risk tolerance, the majority-win effect makes the trend-following strategies become dominant strategies. For high market impact and low risk tolerance, the minority-win effect makes the trend-rejecting strategies coupled with trend-following strategies become dominant strategies. The coupled effects of price fluctuations and strategy distributions have been investigated in depth. A U-shape distribution of history-dependent strategies is beneficial for a stable price, which is destroyed by the existence of reference point strategies with low risk tolerance. A δ-like distribution of history-dependent strategies leads to a large price fluctuation, which is suppressed by the existence of reference point strategies with high risk tolerance. The strategies that earn more in an inefficient market lose more in an efficient market. Such a result gives us another explanation for the principle of risk-profit equilibrium in financial markets: high return in an inefficient market should be coupled with high risk in an efficient market, low return in an inefficient market should be coupled with low risk in an efficient market.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
17
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f623db893bf7609057c617ef7e06086